xt7hdr2p6h4m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hdr2p6h4m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19601028  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 28, 1960 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 28, 1960 1960 2013 true xt7hdr2p6h4m section xt7hdr2p6h4m Who Was Lydia Brown ?

By MARILYN MORRIS
Kernel Staff Writer
The little white sign outside the Lydla Brown
House on Harrison Avenue does not furnish enough
information to the general public.
It docs not explain "what the house Is or who
Lydia Brown was.
It is not" the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority
house, the Baptist Student Union, a p
house, or
the Lydia Brown home for the aed, as some people
co-o-

think.
The Lydia Brown House is a women's dormitory
named after a former University house mother.
Mrs. Lydia E. Brown came to UK In 1915 and
served as the "matron" of Patterson Hall for many
years. When the boarding house on Harrison Avenue

was rented by the University due to room shortage
in Patterson Hall, Mrs. Brown became housemother

there.

Shortly afterward the Board of Trustees Increased-throom and board fees from five to seven dollars

e

a week.
In 1943 the boarding house was bought by the
University for $11,700 and was used for two years
until it was closed to be remodeled. About $10,000 was
spent in refurnishing, putting in the back stairs, and
building modern bathrooms.
Mrs. Brown retired in 1932 but returned to UK
for the summer sessions to assist at Patterson Hall.
Thirteen years later the University named the boarding house after her, calling it "The Lydia Brown
House."

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University of

Kc

ntuc h y

LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY, OCT. 28,

Vol. LI I

.,

No. 20

1900

NEA Executive Secretary
Will Address Educators

Dr. Frank G. Dickey, president
Affiliated group meetings will
of the University, will preside at be held tomorrow morning for
the opening session. The topic of teachers of English, math, social
Dr. Carr's speech will be "Educa- studies, and foreign languages.
School administrators and elementional Imperatives for lMOV
A Blazer Lecture will be de- tary school principles will also
livered in connection with the meet tomorrow.
conference by Robert W. Morris,
first secretary for education in the
British Embassy, Washington, D.C.,
The conference will be held in at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall.
conjunction with the 26th, annual
Other conference activities inmeeting cf the Kentucky Assoc- clude a business session at 11:30
iation of Colleges, Secondary, and a.m., and meetings of the college,
Elementary Schools. About 400 secondary and elementary groups
Kentucky teachers and educators at 2 p.m. A meeting of independare expected to attend the two-da- y ent secondary schools will be held
Mortar Board, senior women's
at 4 p.m.
conference.
honorary, will sponsor a tutoring
plan, beginning next week, de'A Likely Story
signed to . acquaint students with
available student tutors.
A standard fee of $2 an hour
Members of Delta Tau Delta fraternity had to do a lot of ex- will be paid to the tutors by their
individual students. Necessary inplaining yesterday morning.
formation for the jobs includes
. The whole fraternity snoozed through first period classes.
exams in full swing, several of the Delts name, college, address, phone numWith
burned the midnight oil Wednesday preparing for the "academic ber, subject to be taught, and

Dr. William G. Carr, executive secretary of the National
Education Association, will deliver the keynote address of
the 37th annual University Educational Conference at 10 a.m.
today in Memorial Hall.

Honorary
To Sponsor
Tutor Plan

Classes Meet, Delts Sleep
mid-semest-

er

evaluations."

At 8:45 am. yesterday, all the Delts were fast asleep.
"It's awful light for 6:30 a.m.." a surprised Delt said. Then he
discovered the real time.
d
classes and almost
He and 32 brothers had missed
missed the second.
Confusion reigned through the house at the discovery. The alarm
clocks were supposed to go off at 7 ajn.
The fraternity men all hit the kitchen at the same time hoping
to eat, therefore causing further confusion and delay.
A spokesman for a local power company said a main line was
town and power was off from 5:25 a.m. to 7 a.m. In the area.
This was rumored to have affected the electric clocks In some
first-perio-

--

manner.

hours and standing in that subject.
Interested students should contact Sue Ball or Pat Jarvls, 325
Columbia Terrace, by Friday, Nov.
4. The list of approved student
tutors will be sent to each residence hall and department head.

I

Wish...

Was the wish for good luck on midterm tests or for a special
Homecoming date? Audrey Suliycki, this week's Kernel Sweetheart, seems pleased with her choice at the wishing well. She Is
a freshman Alpha Gamma Delta pledge from Erie,, Pa.

Art Professor To Exhibit
Abstract Painting Series

Frederic Thursz, assistant art professor and Fulbright scholarship
winner, will give an exhibition of his abstract paintings Oct. 30 to
Nov. 23 in the Fine Arts Gallery.
Prof. Thursx has had previous
"This series of paintings is an
elegy to the six million people exhibitions here and In Louisville
D. C. lie is origwho died In concentration camps and Washing-ton,in the Second World War, some inally from Cassablanca, Morocco,
of whom were my family," Prof. and received his B.A. at Queen's
College, New York.
Thursz said.
Robert Hazel, assistant profes"I did not want to depict the
. pain
directly endured In sor of English, has written a poem
human
the concentration camp; instead, which is related to the paintings
I chose to use color and a specific and will be displayed with them.
shape 'to symbolize oppression.
"These are my personal means
of conveying a tragic sense muted
SUB Activities
through 15 years of time," he
Kentucky Association of Indeadded.
pendent Schools, 4 p.m.. Room
The paintings, seen here for
128.
the first time, will go on to WashRoom
Beta Alpha Psi, 6 .,
ington and New York museums. 128.
Several of the 30 paintings have
Phi. Delta Kappa luncheon,
noon. Ballroom.
been sold.
Scottish Rite dinner, 6 pan
Ballroom.
Phi Delta Kappa and Kappa
p.m., Mosio
Delta PI tea,
Room.
Cosmopolitan Club, 7:30 p.m..
Music and Social Rooms.
Student Union bridge tournament, 8 p.m., Y Lounge.

World News Briefs

34

Reds Asked To Drop

United States appealed
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Oct. 27 (JPh-T- he
to the Soviet Union today to drop Premier Khrushchev's
demands on disarmament, and for the sake of world peace to keep the
negotiations.
door open for East-We- st
U.S. Delegate James J. Wadsworth declared that the
urged by the West could result in total disarmament in five
or six years, or even less if there is "good faith and a real sense of
urgency on both sides."

Western Bir 3 Warns Reds

(

LONDON, Oct. 27 (P) The Russians were warned in Western
Bib Three notes published today to avoid tampering with air corridors to West Berlin and to restrain the Communist East Germans
from squeezing that isolated city aground.
Britain, France, and the United States informed the Soviet Union
that the Western powers insist on the right to use the three air corridors from West Germany, 110 miles away, without restriction.

Kennedy Pleads For Progress

W. U. S. Committee

NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (P Sen. John F. Kennedy today pleaded
for help to a huge throng in New York's garment district. He told
them their choice is between those who want to progress and those
who want to stand still.
At another packed street meeting in the nearby fur district, Kennedy said he doesn't believe Vice President Richard M. Nixon "has
the vaguest idea of the kind of times in hich we live" and how to
meet the problems that face the country.

Members of the World University Service Steering Committee
this year are (first row, from left) Irma Strache, publicity; Kris
Ramsey, correspondence; and Betty Pace, secretary; second row,
Prof. John Kuiper, head of the Department of Philosophy, adviser;
John Cray era ft, treasurer; Norman llarned, chairman; and Katy
Kirk, women solicitations. Carryl Sipple, men solicitations, was
A $1,000
absent. The W.U. S. rampjign will run from Nov.
set by the committee.
goal has been

NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (JPi A network reporter said today a fifth
debate has been tentatively set for next Monday between the two
presidential rivals, but a spokesman for Sen. John F. Kennedy, the
Democratic candidate, denied it.
Pierre Salinger, Kennedy's press secretary, said in fact "We are
farther from agreement (with Vice President Richard M. Nixon) than
we were yesterday."

'J A
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.

"
v..

.

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2.

P-m-

.

Disarmament Plan

r

-

Kennedy Denies Set Debate

.

6--

Dr. Scherago
Gives Award

In California
Dr. Morris Scherago, head of
the Department of Microbiology,
will present the 1960 Kimble Methodology Research Award Oct. 31 in
San Francisco, Calif.
Dr. Scherago is chairman of the
award committee of the Conference of State and Provincial Public Health Laboratory Directors
which is in charge of the annual
$1,000 award.
Dr. Scherago has held his present position since 1923. He was
elected Distinguished Professor of
the Year In 1950-5In 1959, he was a recipient of
the UK Alumni Association Fac
ulty. Award for outstanding contributions in science.
Dr. Scherago has had 99 publications in leading scientific
journals and is the chairman of
the Liason Committee of the Laboratory Section of the American
Public Health Association for 1960.
1.

* 28, 19U)

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

2

Interview Schedule Released

The University Placement Serv- - weight In proportion to height,
Ice has released the following In- - and 2059 vision or better; Corn- tervlew schedule for the week of Ing Glass Works, mechanical and
electrical engineering; commerce
4.
Oct.
- and arts and sciences for super- Oct. 31 d. C. Murphy Company, B.S. level in economics, vision, quality control and produc- business, management, tlon planning.
Potomac River Naval Command,
personnel, Industrial management
or liberal arts (with no military electrical and mechanical en- obligation for 6 months), mcrch- - gineering; mathematics, physics,
sales, and management; and physical chemistry.
Lever Brothers Com- Nov.
Shell Oil Company Products Pipe
pany, men in all fields with in- engineering.
Nov. 1 American Airlines, single terest In sales; Linde Company,
women, 2026, between 5 feet 3 men and women at all deRree
Inches and 5 feet 8 Inches, with levels in chemistry, physics; civil,
electrical. Industrial, me- 31-No-

t

i

(
4

v.

1-

V

.

0,500

For Iloiiiecoiiiins Tilt

v

miiri niiiimr

uei

WilWiniinn-fii-

mum

DtlCalS Keilinill

fir"i

MW

Homecoming
Game witn vanaercut. set ror next
weekend, are being sold at a very
rate, the UK ticket office re- ported yesterday.
Hodges, head of the of- nee, announced mat mere are
Tickets

.vmmm

.

Kennedy For Nixon?
Roommates Kyra Hackley (left) and Bobbie Mason appear to
be In disarreement oter the sign on their door In Holmes Hall.
poster, retaliated
Miss Hackley, objecting to the Kennedy-Johnso- n
on the noses of the Democratic nominees.
by putting Nixon buttons
Here Sen. John F. Kennedy nose ays, "I'm For Nixon.-

the

for

still 7.000 bleacher seats and
stadium seats available.

1,500

i

.

-2

i

i

11

..

i

i

3
Nov.
Air Reduction Com
pany. chemistry and engineering
2--

at all degree levels.
n0v. 3 Haynes Etelllte. men
and women In ceramic, chemical,
industrial, mechanical, and
allurgical engineering,
(fr
Noy
and Gamble,
Jn a,( fie,d, wJlh nlert
,n Ia,es. Rhf ou Company
dlanapolls), men In economics and
e,
buslnrss administration, with
cpre jntrrfSt jn accounting and
corporatlon finance, for training
,n trrasury department; arts and
rfnrMf commerce, and engineer-chemica- l,
,
tr,ininr nrotram.
met-gene-

3.4-proo-

(in-andisi-

sin-Lin-

4 R. K. Le Blond Machine
Company, mechanical, elec
Tool
trical, metallurgical, and Indus- enRineerlng; U.S. Steel, en
,
Corporation, electrical
MU
gineering.
en.lneerlnf at a, dfgree levels;
SchlumberKfr Well Surveying Cor-sloporatlonf electrical, mechanical,
and petroleum engineering;
glnftring physics; U. S. Industrial
chemlcals. chemistry at all de
gree levels; and chemical engineering.
NOW SHOWING

Nov.

gineering at all degree levels.

iPlTJ:!:

tr1

w

en-Harv- ey

9

BETWEEN TIME

State To Recruit Students
In Employment Program
graduates of Kentucky colleges an outgrowth of the state

Dance Tichets
Tickets for the Homecoming
Dance will be on sale from
a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday of next week at the SUB
ticket booth. Tables may be reserved with the purchase of a
block of 13 tickets.
The dance will be from
p.m., Nov. 5, in the SUB Ballroom. Tickets will also be avail' p.m. Tuesday
able from
through Friday in the Donovan
Hall cafeteria.

em- -

ployee merit system enacted by
the 1960 General Assembly,
The recruitment of college
students began this month. "We
are primarily Interested in busi- ness and social science majors, and
we are always looking for en- gineers," Banks announced,
por college graduates, the be- -

and high schools will be recruited
the State Department of Per- sonnel for employment this year
for the first time in Kentucky
hislory.
Fontalne Banks, director of the
division of recruitment and place- ment, said students at 18 colleges
and universities will be inter- viewed. The program which is ginning monthly salaries range
from $324 to $436, Banks said.
The recruiting progiam for high
school students- - will begin in the
spring, Banks said. The greatest
15
shortage is stenographers, but'
Delta Sigma Pi. professional nny Jbs are available. The
fraternity, held a pledg- - 8e beginning monthly salary for
ceremony for its new. 15 hl&h scho1 graduates is $220.
ing
pledges Tuesday night.
by.

8-- 13

30

-

OPEM DAILY 1:30 P.M.

FT

Delta Sigma Pi
Pledges
Men

aver-commer-

Those pledged were Ted Mon- roe, Jerry Strickler, John Thompson, Donald Riel, John Williams,
Johnny Williams, Wayne Bunch,
Jim Cox, Patrick Bean, John
Livingston, James Sympson, William Kaufman, John McDaniel,
Ed Derry, and Ben Carter.

AvenueChew

TODAY

Che

AND SATURDAY!

"ELMER GANTRY"

ce

IN COLOR

With Lilli Palmer

YELLOW CAB

2ND HIT

Inc.

"TAKE A GIANT

Radio Equipped

The Greatest Show

Dial

2-22-

STEP"
in TODD-AO- !
STUDENTS 90c ANY
TIME

30

DRIVE-I- N

Burt Lancaster Jean Simmon
'WAKE ME WHEN IT IS OVZR"
Ernie Kovacs Margo Moort

WMMiMl

A

HUM

SlHARfilarUlIKE

AdmUwow 7$e
Srfti 7:00
The Stranqeit Story
Area Premiere
Ever Filmed . . . Dcmenivcal!
Diabolical! Unearthv!
OF THE DAMNED"

"VILLAGE

Sanders Barbara Shcllty
Th Wiard Child Demons!
(7:06 nd 10:45)

Georq

2a.

ALSO

The Circle 25 Auto Theatre has been selected as
one of the 200 theatres which will present the first
showing of one of the most unusual motion pictures ever made.

The international fraternity has

Metro-Goldwyn-May-

"THE TUNNEL OF LOVE"
(In Color at 8:53)

EVENINGS:
Sun. thru Thurs. Friday & Saturday
MATINEES:

Admission 75c

Starts 7:00

It's likeKinsey Report on the campus

er

"COLLEGE CONFIDENTIAL"
Steve Allen Jayne AAtadowt

a new adviser, Dr. Don B. Soule,
assistant professor of economics.
Following the pledging ceremony, a film was shown, "Credit
Man's Confidence in Man," by
Dun and Bradstreet.

Walter Winchell
PLUS

Mamie Van Doren
The Great One

"HOME FROM THE HILL"
Robert Mitehum

urn

milium2
Starts 7:00

SANDERS

GEORGE

Eleanor

n

peats

f arker

7

...

BARBARA SHELLEY
AS PARENTS TORMENTED
BY A FIENDISH SON WHO
IS NOT THEIR OWN!

8:00 p.m.
8:30 p.m.

Wed., Sat., Sun.

2:00 p.m.

STRAND Theatre

fglEN ALB
NOW SHOWING

ULtSL

Admission 5c
All the Women . . .
All the Men
That Made All th Talk
"FROM THE TERRACE" (7:08)
Paul Newman Joanne Woodward
PLUS
Sudden Death in
"WARLOCK" (9:50)
Richard Widmark Henry Fonda
Anthony Quinn Dorothy Maione
(Both in Cinemascope and Color)

YYVV'

VV

AND ETERNITY"

LEXINGTON

DIEECTORY

Euclid

r
YUL

ft

i A IF H h
r
fx

i

Scvtn

fouhtlike
seven hundred!

ALSO

Dorris Day and Richard Widmark

DOWNTOWN

HEATERS

IN-CA- R

AND

INDOOR SEATING
1

"THE TUNNEL OF LOVE"
It's all about making love and
having babies and how to have
fun doing it.

19 South Limestone
Open Until 1:00 a.m.
I

Show

11(3 0

Starts
7:00 p.m.
NUMBER

,1

6

0

LIU

'ilGPQ!iVilll'Mi

NUMBER 3

NUMBER 2

1

Tonight
and
Saturday

THE

-

ll

1

4

1
4

t

1--

DAV10

F.

T

M

u

M

rr.1"'

STARTING SUNDAY
Th One You've Waited For

Anthony
Perkins

Janet
Leigh

master

ANDREWS

put
an ad

,4

-

in . . .

0ANA

1

CUMMIN?

lit

f ARRAR

Tcould
find my
if

TECHNICOLOR
tWJ. MCNTCOMtUT
TAiNA

heard

rcccv

'

PSYC1H1

r!MN COLOR
ALSO

In Color and Scope
William Holder

"BRIDGES

Grace Kelly

OF TOKYO"

ral

I

mm

j

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Friday, Oct.

3

28,

Halloween Holiday Provides Excuse For Colorful Parties
By JANET HICKS

the wierdcst colony of creatures tricks and treats on hand. Even
and you can find.
the beatniks, who won t have to
over heads will haunt
nir and little brothers of Hil dress up. will enjoy the beat poetry
fraternity row and the dorms this Kappa Tau are having a dinner at this swinging affair.
weekend. Better be careful who tonlht. No doubt, much discus- Masks 'are in oracr lor Jewell
U
8
Halls party tonight from
I?
i. lU I it may be the ",0" con,prn,n lhf drfM 'or
Dart,
morrow's masquerade party at the
Everyone is Invited and
monster bobbing for apples next house will be hashed over the Joe
payjng.
Mis
tables. The Empires are eontrlbut- Wesley Foundationers will alio
Halloween holiday, even if In the eerie sounds 6f wltchesvllle be
danrlnr fr6m 8.12 p m al (he
we cant riot for a day free of and prizes will be awarded to the
Rodent center. All witches can
elates on Monday, supplies many "ghostliest" costumes present.
PaTe thrlf brooms in the closets
cxcusc-for colorful parties. So
Everyone will be in costume at because dress is strictly for
the
fuit your fancy and associate with the Hamilton Howe tonight, wifh people.
torn

Fhects

from

the lr dates with costumes for their
party Saturday nlht; The boys
are prorldinf their dates with
pajamas for a pajama party. For
om rfason "
"rt who's
phvinj for the beddy.bye-bop- .
Saturday afternoons at Joyland
are back in style! A real panhel- lpn,c spirited group, Delta Delta
Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamma,
Delta Tu Delta, and Phi Delta
Theta,
be swinging to the
Pacesetters and want everyone to

beds

V

8-- 12

oic.

tU

tonight, the Newman Club
members will be dancing at Castle- wood Park to Bob Miller's band.
The Alpha Gamma Rho's have
moved out all their furniture and
are having an Informal Halloween
party tonight at their house.
Carole Carta, Carol Craigmyle.
Any face but your own is In- .
uuune, oara jane wens, VltCd to Bovd Ii.ill . s IfailnuTpn
rvimu t.
waney uanrortn, Kay Hart. Nancy h
7,7, " L
Williams. Diane Schorr, and Ann
woudn.t "ced masks'
f0me
Nlckells.
r.vrryone is
intjf
ic irqiu-McuDames Style Show
invito snH ih
T
TV
iiics sl. .l win icaiure a provided by Joe Mills and Eob
iuo in
siyie snow sponsored by "Four Miller
Seasons" at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
And then there are the Thi
inov. i, in tne student Union Ball Delta Thefas who arc supplying
roomclub members will model
fashions for Bportswear. davtime.

Join them from 1:30-- 5 p.m.
For tni3 Party. too, you can leave
tne Pumpkins on the porch step3
ancl tne brooms In the closets.
Just bring Jour dates and lots of
clder

Also

-

Social Activities
F1JIS HAVE GUESTS
t-.
t
r.t
uun.1 xvi.
....
r-etwaru ana xvirs. tsier Mcchesney,
fraternity secretary for the dean
cf men. were dinner guests of
Phi Gamma
Delta
fraternity
Wednesday night.
Dean Seward spoke briefly following the dinner.
n--,,-

x

i

.

NEWMAV

paijtv

TLl-- n

Newman Club members will have
a Halloween party from
o'cloc
tonight at Castlewood
Park. Music will be furnished by
disc Jockey Joe Mills.
Club members are to meet at
the Newman House at 7:30 p.m.
There will be no cost to members
with cards.
TRIANGLES SET PARTY
Triangle fraternity will have a
Halloween costume Dartv at th
8-- 12

IZTto

?oItume

nTh,
the

.

."1

gLi

V"
PI?

be
1

SAE PLEDGE

OFFICERS
Clines, Huntington. W.
va.. has been elected president
of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon pledge
David

t' 3r:,

Other officers

are Dart

iIaVil,e

till

Jivl

;

V,CC

I,Iarmn

liJdi j.

m

Toy

KPP

For the personal gift

N. E. Corner of Main
PHONE

&

The

Little Inn

732 LANE ALLEN RD.

46

Sat. Nights
with

.ft

mil

I

1

at Graves;

Cox in

CONSULTATION or CONVERSATION
on pertinent subjects, of course

.,

.

BARRY GOODWIN

nrt:

On
Phone Or dci

Bring this advertisement when you pick up your phone

A sophomore from Salem, Virginia,
who transferred to U.K. from V.P.I.
His major field of study is psychology
which makes his judgment on clothes
pretty cogent, because he may estimate your inner as well as outer dimensions. He has had experience in
this too, as the John Norman, Inc.,
'.Roanoke, clothing consultant for
V.P.I. And now his informed presence
'will be at your service at Graves, Cox.

liclui
DICK CONGER

A junior from Louisville who transferred to U.K. from W. and L Dick

..

Discount

O

LoIIaQcJ

WW I

YOUR ORDER BAGGED AND READY
WHEN YOU ARRIVE

GO-GO-G-

ARE IN YOUR MIDST!

L:l

Guess Who)

If it's on the MENU, It Can

TWO SARTORIAL EXPERTS
And they will be

i

discount on your purchase.

41

1

(S mlnut

from
downtown)

7-62-

the afternoons for

ris

Tht Mllowtones
9 'til 1

DIAL

w

if

WINCHESTER ROAD
PHONE
Dane

11

Lime

72

Alpha

Luncheon
Dinners
Lounge

Give Us a Call, That's All .
We Do the Rest

receive 10

I

Spongier Studio

WHO'S PHONE NUMBER IS THIS?

order

ii
I

Your Portrait

11112, 5

10

all my comrades.

0

Indiana

'

(Your Clues

.

i

Rent Pinning
Betty Dawn Weaver, Chi Omega.

Mobley'
Cnuck Georgetown and
social chair- - versity.

New Guppies are Julie Wardup,
Caroline Warren, Trish Miller!
Emily Riley. Mary Dale Mclver
Cherie Barnett. Linda Chezr.ey!
Karen Chase, Elsie Kay, Marie
Browning. Nancy Park.
Kathy Thomas. Phyllis Howard.

Sunday afternoon.
I guess that's about It for the
Halloween weekend. It's time for
me to hop on my broom' and Joiu

a

evening.
ana
ivcs ui unuergTaauaie
graduate students are Invited to
attend. New members may still
Join at this meeting.
Mrs. Joseph Justice is program
chairman and Mrs. Frank Gossett
Is social chairman.
For. Future Stewardesses
An American Airlines official
will talk to all interested univer
Slty WOmcn at 7
Mond
in
Room
of the Student union
Buildln- - A film
uU in
formation regarding stewardess
positions will be shown and a
question and answer period will
,
follow.
All women who want informa-I- s'
tion concerning stewardess posi- tions should plan to attend.

Petrey' to

try-cut-

i

triK.

-

secre- -

DELT PLEDGE OFFICERS
Buzzy Hulette. Morganfleld. has
teen elected president of the
Delta Tau Delta pledge class.
Other officers are Cap Middle-to- n.
Shrcveport. La., vice president; Ed Houlihan. Winchester,
.secretary; and Don Griffin, St.
Albans, W. Va., treasurer.
BLUE MARLIN GUPPIES
Blue Marlins, women's swimming
organization, recently chose 22
freshmen Guppies. About 100 coeds
attended the membership
s.

The sports boarding the

sleeping bags and all, from the
dorms and sorority row, will be
the Kappa Deltas. Their annual
retreat for the actives arid plcdjtes
will beRin Saturday at 2:30 p,m.
The girls will return from the
Ilairington Lake Sunset Lodzo

.

Presldet:

Lexington,

?
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Home parlies nrl retreats re
on the agenda again this week-throend. The Alpha XI Deltas have
Invited their pledfes to the hobse
for a weekend of little sleep and
lots of fun.

major whose extra
experience includes working as
(Da salesman at Kaufman's of Kentucky in Louisville, (2) a waiter at the
Theta House, (3) house manoger at
the Delt House, and (4) as an exchange student working in (of all
places) L'Electricite de France. All of
which enables him to be, among other
things, a clothier par excellence.
is a Commerce

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* Inequitable Arrangement
Since its inception, the new Honors Program lias lcen surrounded by
inequality, lint, because most of this

incquitability affected the Honors
Students themselves, vc liavc refrained from comment on it.
With the setting aside of a special
area of the Library for Honors Students, however, we find a disparity
of treatment that affects all University
students and a number of staff members as well.
It is not merely the setting aside
of more than 250 square feet of Library space for the exclusive use of
the Honors Students that disturbs us;
but the Library is already overcrowded and unable to effectively carry out
all its responsibilities to the students

who use it. The withdrawal of 2o0
square feet of storage space only
compounds the Library's problem of
trying to meet its responsibilities to
the campus. ,
Library workers have already
spent several weeks transferring volumes and shifting books to make room
for the Honors Students' study room
and will undoubtedly spend several
more weeks putting things in order
and becoming accustomed to the new
arrangement.
While we concur in Dr. Stephen
Diachun's belief that the Honors
Students should have such facilities
available to them, we feel that until
the Library expansion is complete it
is hardly fitting that so many others
be inconvenienced.

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Votes

Needed-213,25- 3
There is an important job to be
done and 213,253 people are needed
to assure its completion.
The task is the revision of the Kentucky Constitution and 213,253
of the total vote cast in last
November's gubernatorial election-- is
the minimum number of affirmative
votes needed to secure a convention
to study and recommend changes in
Constitution.
the
One's first thought is that it
shouldn't be too hard to get little
more than '200,000 votes in a presidential election year. After some investigation, however, we have found
one-quart- er

ld

a widespread lack of interest in the
Constitutional revision referendum.
University students, as the future civic, business, and political
leaders of Kentucky, must take an
active role in securing the needed
constitutional changes. They must not
only vote for the Constitutional convention themselves, but they must
also influence their parents, relatives,
and friends to approve the Constitutional convention.
Those 213,253 votes may not sound
like too many; but the failure to attain them could set Kentucky back
70 years.

An Appeal To Students
Dear Students:
World University Service has become the agency to which the international student community can turn
in time of crisis. One of. the continuing functions of WUS is to supply material assistance to staff and students
in need throughout the world. The
principal fields of action are problems
of student housing and living, student health, and emergency aid, including refugee services.
WUS is a program of mutual assistance and education concerned
with providing material aid while
building international understanding
and cooperation. It is a nonsectarian,
nonpolitical program carrying out

work without regard to race, creed,
or nationality. WUS is not an American organization giving bilateral assistance, a handout, or charity to
other countries, but is the cooperative
effort of students and professors in
40 countries.
Although we are called upon frequently to participate in and to contribute to worthy causes, I can think
of none more important than the
World University Service drive which
will le underway on Nov. 1.
Please be as generous as possible
in your contribution to this worthy
organization.
Frank G. Dickey
President

THE READERS' FORUM
Insulted Diners
To The Editor:
Since the Kernel represents a majority of the University students'
feelings, we feel that the atmosshould be brought
phere or
to your attention.
First, the waitresses are inconsiderate and rude. They will stare at
you for the longest time before they
will ever think of waiting on you.
And when they finally bring the food,
usually half of it is missing. If you
tell them that some of the food is
missing they act insulted and wonder
if you actually ordered it.
Secondly, the dining area is

filthy. They serve food on dirty tables
with dirty silverware- - and dishes.
weren't so close to
If

campus we're sure it would be out of
business because of the lack of service and cleanliness.

Val Floyd
Betsy Chisiiolm
Nancy Morcan
(We are unable to publish the
name of the restaurant to which the
writers listed above referred, but be?
cause poor service and lack of
are problems at many of the
eating places near the campus, ice
felt their views merited reproduction
here. The Editor).
clean-lines-

The Kentucky Kernel
University of Kentucky

Entered t the pot office t Lexington, Kentucky a J second tint matter under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Fubliidied tour timet a week durina the regular school year except during holidays and eiarnl.
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

Bob Andkbson, Editor
Newton Sfenceh, Sports Editor
WtNNiNCER, Managing Editor
Mike
BoBKiE Masom, Assistant Managing Editor
Stcaht Coldfabb, Advertising Manager
Alice Akin, Society Editor
Skip Taylob, Cartoonist
Nicky Pope, Circulation
Fehhy Ashley, Business Manager
-

FRIDAY NEWS STAFF
FtccY Bbl'mlee, AsuKiate

Bex Bailey, Sews Editor
JOHN FlTZWATEB, SpOrtS

"Couldn't the dog eat on the floor?'9
A Fable

Elijah And The Tiger
. By KERRY POWELL

smashed, wadded

up the precious

six dollars and threw them at the

Once long ago, in the sprawling
city of Exenton, in the distant green clerk's unpleasant face. He stalked
land of Tuckey, a great university out of the store and marched angrily
down the street, feeling ill.
prospered.
Nausea seized him. His hollow
The university had thousands of
students, and, more important to the cheeks contracted, and he lcgan to
cough wildly. His legs trembled. He
townspeople, the students had thousands of dollars. Now the good folk wobbled uncertainly as he walked.
of Exenton were a greedy breed. They The stabbing pain in his stomach
opened clothing stores, food markets, grew intolerable. Blood gushed from
his mouth. Elijah threw up.
and bawdy houses in the neighbor"I need an aspirin," he diagnosed
hood of the university. The merchants
of the city became wealthy and wisely.
Bagged and tattered, stinking and
well fed.
bleeding, poor Elijah stumbled
Elijah Ilickathrift was a new student at the great school. His family wearily into one of the many growas poor, for he had come from the ceries near the university.
"What do you want?" asked the
barren province known as Paducah
"unold proprietor curtly.
(from the Celtic, meaning
peopled wilderness"), liecause of his
"A bottle of aspirin, if you please,"
poverty, Elijah Ilickathrift was forced rejoined Elijah painfully.
to reject extravagance. For him there
"Here you are, 27 cents."
was no fraternity, no pretty coeds, no
Elijah searched through his
grog. Yea, Elijah's clothing was rotpockets frantically. He found nothting on his limbs. His armpits stank. ing. Not a penny. He inspected his
Elijah's only consolation was his pockets once again, turning them inlover who had remained in provinside out. At length he turned up a
cial Paducah while her sweetheart atpiece of yellow, tattered paper. A
tended the great university. More blank check Of course, it was the
than anything, poor, unselfish Elijah blank check his father liad given to
wanted to send his Hallie a present him in case of an emergency!
from the university.
Hastily Elijah scrawled the prescribed
"A stuffed animal would be nice," sum
on the check.
thought Elijah one homesick evening.
"Your money, sir," said the bleedThe very next day Elijah Ilicking, coughing, foaming Elijah.
athrift had his first encounter with
The old man shook his head sternthe merchants of Exenton when he ly and pointed to an aged sign which
entered one of the countless novelty hung on the wall. "No Checks," it
shops in the university neighborhood.
read.
He was met at the counter by a cold,
"Dang it! Dang it . . ." and Elijah's
dispassionate lady clerk.
voice trailed, ". . . to . . . heck!" He
"What do you want?" she snapped. moaned softly and collapsed to the
"A toy tiger, if you please," refloor. Elijah Ilickathrift was dead.
torted Elijah.
The old grocer pretended not to
The clerk left Elijah without a notice his death agony. The hired
word and returned shortly with a help would clean up the mess later.
large stuffed tiger.
But to this very day, in the sprawl"Perfect!'' exclaimed Elijah jubiing city of Ex